Remembering Chairman Fred

Remembering Chairman Fred
Screeching tires. Flashing lights. Heavily armed men rushing up the dark stairwell open fire through walls
and doors on the sleepers inside. When it is over at least 90 holes mark the trajectories of police bullets
entering the apartment, mostly aimed at a young man’s bed. One bullet had answered from within. It
was December 4, 1969, 35 years ago this week.
A few hours later my junior high teacher asks me about my black arm band. “Fred Hampton was
murdered this morning,” I reply. Over the next few days members of the Chicago Black Panther Party
will usher clusters of supporters (my father included), through the shattered and blood-stained
apartment—until the police seal off the evidence. It will be learned that Hampton’s body guard, a police
informant, had laced his juice with a sedative and given the cops a floor plan of the apartment, an X
marking the location of his bed.
The official line, trumpeted in the media by FBI-linked reporters, was that the Panthers were a danger
because they were racist and violence-prone. Internal FBI memos tell a different story. It was precisely
the Party’s ability to bridge racial divides that they found so alarming. The Fed’s failure to provoke
deadly violence between the Panthers and the Blackstone Rangers street gang led to the pre-dawn raid.
The following years saw me organizing walkouts and marches, conferences and occupations in support of
the besieged party. I worked in the Panther Defense Committee and even my high school’s banned
Black Student Union (where I held the cherished title of “Token Spic”). While a young Mumia Abu
Jamal was hawking the Black Panther newspaper on the streets of Philly, I—though a member of
neither group—was selling the Panther along with Pitirre, the paper of the Young Lords Organization,
in Chicago. The Lords were like Puerto Rican Panthers. They’d been a street gang that went political
under the Panther’s influence. Fred Hampton mentored them. Chairman Fred also pulled in the Young
Patriots, white street kids born of the Appalachian migratory stream. He brought them all into an alliance
for which he coined the name “The Rainbow Coalition.” It was 1968.
Fred Hampton is remembered as a martyr of the FBI’s war on the radical left, the COINTELPRO
(Counter-Intelligence Program). What folks forget is the promise he embodied. While the national
leaders in California, Huey Newton, Bobby Seal, Kathleen and Eldridge Cleaver, became household
names, there were stars shining in the chapters. Fred was one of the brightest. Soon after he’d founded
the Chicago Chapter he had five “Free Breakfast for Children” programs running on the west side, along
with a free health clinic, door to door screening for sickle cell anemia, and the Panther’s famous police
watch patrols. He had a charismatic ability to communicate with all kinds of people, a way of cutting
through the ideological fog, and a love for the abused and disrespected of the streets that was contagious.
He was soon talking with the Latin Kings, the Blackstone Rangers, and the Disciples, looking for ways to
bring them out of the street wars and into the struggle. (It’s a credit to the politics he personified that this
tribute to him is written by a Jewish Puerto Rican.) He was the kind of leader that FBI field offices were
warned to watch out for and, when identified, to “neutralize.” When he fell he had been tapped to
become national Chief of Staff for the Party. He was twenty one years old.
The wave of repression that took Fred Hampton and fellow Panther Mark Clark that morning, swept
across U.S. communities of color leaving hundreds dead, wounded or in prison (where many remain). In
its wake came the money, federal funds pouring into new social service agencies and police departments.
A “leader” in our communities was now anyone who got to head up an agency. As whites fled the cities
and funds were shifted elsewhere, dark faces were allowed into mayoral offices to preside over the
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wreckage.
The craving for dignity and respect that electrified the struggle of a generation ago still echoes in our
streets, but without the hope it finds its outlet in gangs. In place of the “survival programs” there are
“non-profit corporations.” Stripped of revolutionary vision, they are designed to administer, not to
transform. Two forms of community “management,” neither of them a threat to the structures of wealth.
Brother Chairman, the challenges we are facing are no harder than those you confronted. If you were
with us you’d simply insist that the despised and oppressed are the solution, not the problem.
We lost you too soon, little brother (cruel history has made me your elder now). I’m sorry we couldn’t
protect you. I’m sorry that your son has had to follow your road without ever having touched you.
And as for us? What can I say, man… wish you were here.